Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us
 
CNN/SI Home
BCS Home
Other Bowls
Other CFB News
Schedule
Breakdowns
Team Pages

BCS Bowls:
Fiesta:
Nebraska 31
Tennessee 21

Orange:
Michigan 35
Alabama 34 (OT)

Rose:
Wisconsin 17
Stanford 9

Sugar:
Florida State 46
Virginia Tech 29

Other Bowls:
Alamo:
Penn State 24
Texas A&M 0

Aloha:
Wake Forest 23
Arizona State 3

Citrus:
Michigan State 37
Florida 34

Cotton:
Arkansas 27
Texas 6

Gator:
Miami 27
Georgia Tech 13

Holiday:
Kansas State 24
Washington 20

Humanitarian:
Boise State 34
Louisville 31

Independence:
Mississippi 27
Oklahoma 25

Insight:
Colorado 62
Boston College 28

Las Vegas:
Utah 17
Fresno State 16

Liberty:
Southern Miss 23
Colorado State 17

Micron:
Illinois 63
Virginia 21

Mobile:
TCU 28
East Carolina 14

Motor City:
Marshall 21
BYU 3

Music City:
Syracuse 20
Kentucky 13

Oahu:
Hawaii 23
Oregon State 17

Outback:
Georgia 28
Purdue 25 (OT)

Peach:
Mississippi State 17
Clemson 7

Sun:
Oregon 24
Minnesota 20

AD PARTNERS

 

Kicked away

Missed extra point gives Michigan 35-34 Orange Bowl win

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Sunday January 02, 2000 03:41 PM

  David Terrell's three touchdowns led the way as Michigan refused to roll over for Alabama. AP

MIAMI (AP) -- Michigan came from behind twice, then held on in overtime to win.

Ryan Pflugner missed an extra-point attempt by inches on the final play to give the Wolverines a 35-34 victory over Alabama on Saturday night in the Orange Bowl.

"Everyone is going to blame me," said Pflugner, a senior. "I missed the last kick. It came down to an extra point I should have made. But it's a team game. Everyone probably could have done something to make it better."

Michigan's Tom Brady threw for 369 yards and four touchdowns, including three to David Terrell, and the Wolverines twice overcame 14-point deficits.

After Michigan's Shawn Thompson caught a 25-yard touchdown pass on the first play of overtime, Alabama scored on Andrew Zow's 21-yard pass to Antonio Carter. But Pflugner's extra-point attempt was just wide to the right.

"This is the greatest ending to a game ever," Michigan linebacker Ian Gold said.

His coach, Lloyd Carr, was less exuberant.

"It was a great football game," Carr said. "It was a shame somebody had to lose. As much I enjoy winning, I hate to see it end the way it did, with a missed extra point."

The Wolverines won even though they lost a fumble at the Alabama 1 in the fourth quarter and had a 36-yard field goal attempt blocked to force the overtime.

Shaun Alexander, the Southeastern Conference player of the year, rushed for 161 yards and three touchdowns in his final game for Alabama. His scores came on runs of 5, 6 and 50 yards, and teammate Freddie Milons scored on a 62-yard punt return.

The eighth-ranked Wolverines (10-2) managed just one first down in the opening 28 minutes but completed their third consecutive 10-win season.

"Everybody said we weren't good enough, but we showed them," said Terrell, who caught 10 passes for 150 yards.

The fifth-ranked Crimson Tide (10-3) lost in their 50th bowl game, an NCAA record.

"It hurts," Milons said. "It really, really hurts, especially when you've played as hard as you can."

The Wolverines' first six possessions produced just one first down, which came on a 5-yard gain on a fake punt. The offense finally mustered a first down with 1:18 left in the opening half, then scored two plays later on a 27-yard pass from Brady to Terrell.

The Wolverines erased deficits of 14-0 and 28-14 thanks to Terrell, who tied Orange Bowl and Michigan bowl records with three touchdown receptions.

Brady, who was 34-for-46, led Michigan to three touchdowns in a 12-minute span in the third quarter.

The comeback wasn't the first by the Wolverines, who rallied from fourth-quarter deficits to win three times during the regular season.

"They've done that all year long," Carr said. "I'll be glad to get rid of them; I don't have much heart left."

Phillip Weeks blocked a field-goal attempt by Hayden Epstein as time ran out in the fourth quarter, forcing the overtime. Earlier in the period, Anthony Thomas lost a fumble at the Alabama 1.

"Everything is not rose petals when it's a street fight," Terrell said.

Attendance based on tickets sold was 70,461, but the actual crowd totaled only about 50,000. The no-shows missed a game filled with penalties and punts but also plenty of big plays and swings in momentum.

Alexander turned a third-and-1 run into a 50-yard touchdown, breaking three tackles to give Alabama a 21-14 lead in the third quarter. Less than three minutes later, Milons caught a 51-yard punt, weaved across the field and scored untouched to make it 28-14.

The Wolverines made the score 14-all on their first series of the second half. Terrell caught a short pass from Brady, eluded cornerback Milo Lewis and sprinted the end zone, completing a 57-yard play.

Terrell beat Lewis again in the third quarter for a 20-yard score.

Alabama picked up only one first down in the opening quarter, but a 32-yard run by Alexander got the Tide rolling. The play started a 76-yard drive that ended with Alexander's 5-yard touchdown run.

Three minutes later, Alabama scored again. Milons' 23-punt return and a late-hit penalty gave the Tide the ball at the Michigan 31, and Alexander's 6-yard touchdown run made the score 14-0.

 
Related information
Stories
CNNSI.com's Bowl Breakdowns
CNNSI.com's Orange Bowl page
CNNSI.com's Bowl Picks
Stats
Michigan-Alabama Game Summary
Multimedia
Michigan QB Tom Brady knew his team would fight to the end. (129 K)
Alabama kicker Ryan Pflugner talks about missing the game-tying extra point. (101 K)
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CNNSI Copyright © 2000
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.